Kudos to HBO for this marketing campaign for the Game of Thrones season three set, which
leads this week's home video releases. There's barely any show footage, just
videos of people reacting to the infamous "Red Wedding" sequence in shock which
will sell more copies than a regular trailer ever could.

With countless featurettes, audio commentaries, deleted and
extended scenes, the requisite guide to people, places and events, and so
forth. What I'm most excited for, though, is hearing Sansa, Bran and Arya's new
version of the opening theme.

Beginning the Namek/Frieza stuff. Remember, this release is
on Blu-ray, but has been rec-ropped to fit widescreen TVs. Which is the price
you pay if you want an anime series made in the '90s to suddenly become
widescreen. Of course, you could just pick up Dragonball Z Kai, which is widescreen, but not the original show. Because the original show was made in the early '90s. When no one did widescreen.

Sam Raimi's cult classic superhero movie (as opposed to his
non-cult, fairly recent superhero movies) gets a super-special edition from
Shout. Even Liam Neeson returns to talk about it in the extras, and he's both proud of it and happy with it! Good
stuff!

Although Cartoon Network still hasn't resumed airing Beware
the Batman, you can finally pick up this release of the first 13 episodes, many
of which haven't aired yet (...and almost certainly never will.).

Some demons are so powerful that the only way to send them
back to hell is to let them possess someone, and then kill that someone. So a group of
rogue priests purposefully debauch themselves to ensure that if the need
arises, they can be possessed, killed and consigned to hell in order to rid the world of
these demons. That sounds AWESOME.

Asylum's Pompeii rip-off. I'm mentioning it solely to
comment on the fact that I love how the Pompeii trailers make it appear that
Jon Snow is personally going to be fighting the volcano and could,
theoretically, win the battle.